Monday, June 20, 2016

No. 70 Len O'Grady

First Prog: 1203

Latest Prog: 1977

First Meg: 240

Latest Meg: 337
(says Barney, but he may have appeared since then…)*

Total appearances: 132 and counting-mostly as
a colourist, but he has drawn bit, too. And, more than likely, I’ve
short-changed him quite a bit. (I’ve counted up colouring credits listed on
Barney, but last I checked, that runs out at Prog 1913.)

O'Grady on Dave Gibbons

Art credits:

Judge Dredd

Tales from the Black Museum

Colouring credits:

Judge Dredd

Banzai Battalion

Sinister Dexter

Interceptor

Tyranny Rex

Anderson, Psi Division

Hondo City Justice

Strange & Darke

Jaegir

The Zaucer of Zilk

Notable characteristics:

Bright and clear, but
also moody when he wants to be. Has facility with the full range of genres and
styles, from straight-up action to moody war to bizarre comedy.

O'Grady on Cliff Robinson

On Len:

Being a colourist
appears to be a pretty steady job. I’ve no idea how it compares to being a
penciller / inker / all-in-one artist in other ways, but that aspect of it at
least has to be desirable. O’Grady got his first work for Tharg in Prog 1203,
and has worked on a least one series a year since then, as good a hit rate as
anyone. And it is good.

I won’t pretend I know
anything about the arcane world of colouring; all I can give are my
impressions. As I see it, O’Grady is the master of colouring things the colour
they actually are. Sure, he uses mood lighting when appropriate, but he doesn’t
go overboard with it – sometimes the mood is simply ‘let’s convey the story’.

The man has blue skin. And no mucking about.
O'Grady on Simon Coleby; words by Gordon Rennie

He’s part of a rare
pantheon of colourists who’s had a crack at a straight art job as well. Not
enough work for even as foolish a commentator as me to suggest any general
patterns, but it is, I think fair to say that he’s more on the cartoony end.

O'Grady on O'Grady
Words by Gordon Rennie

Back to the colouring,
and it’s very much worth noting that O’Grady has been paired with a pretty wide
range of art droids. Most recently he’s been coupled with Simon Coleby on the
super-gritty war series Jaegir.

Using colours to set to tone of war: brown, grey and scary. With explosions.
O'Grady on Coleby; words by Gordon Rennie

But shortly before
that he was coupled with no less a vibrant coloursmith than Brendan McCarthy,
on Zaucer of Zilk. According to O’Grady’s blog, he did the first round
of colouring, then McCarthy did the final presentation. An honour indeed!